Online Appendix Capital Shares and Income Inequality



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Belgium

For Belgium, Erik Buyst (1997) presents comprehensive national accounts data for the 1920–1939 period; Stef Peeter, Martine Goosens, and Buyst (2005) is a book-length presentation of the calculations. (Furthermore, van Meerten 2003 discusses capital formation over the 1900–1995 period.) With these it is possible to calculate wage and capital shares, gross and net, and at market prices or factor cost. It is also possible to adjust for the self-employed, since their incomes are presented separately. With the Buyst data, capital incomes are calculated as the sum of “capital income to private persons,” the growth of “capital reserves of companies” plus direct tax paid by companies, “interest on public debt,” one-third of “entrepreneurial income,” and depreciation. The gross capital share is calculated as this capital income divided by GNP at factor cost. When calculating the net capital share, capital depreciation is left out at both sides of the equation. We use the Buyst data for 1920–1939 and AMECO data from 1960 onwards. There are no top incomes data for Belgium and so as with Austria the Belgian capital shares data are only used for their own sake.

Brazil

For Brazil, Frankema (2010) presents capital share estimates for the period since 1920, using the same method as in the discussion of Argentina earlier. Frankema’s wage share estimate for Brazil shows an increasing trend from about 1930 to the mid-1940s, during the Vargas period, and a stable high level from the mid-1940s to the early 1960s. Frankema (2010, p. 361) explains the decreasing trend before 1930s, during what in Brazil is called “the old republic,” with the “relatively weak position of the labor movement in the country and the relatively strong position of the land-based elite.” The populist Vargas regime of the 1930s and 1940s on the other hand explicitly sought support in the working class (compare Frankema 2010, p. 363). Regarding the high level of the 1950s, he suggests that this might be an artefact of unrepresentative (too high) urban wage series (Frankema 2010, p. 362). Not surprisingly, the wage share falls during the military dictatorship after 1964. Maybe more surprisingly, it does not rebound after democratization in 1984. Frankema explains this with the combination of macro-economic instability, liberalization policies “which prioritized business profits over wages,” and a rapid growth of the labour force (Frankema 2010, pp. 365–7, quote on p. 366).
There are few studies of wage and capital shares in Brazil, but Renato Colistete (2007) studies “Productivity, Wages, and Labor Politics in Brazil, 1945–1962.” He claims that in contrast to Europe with its “social compact for growth” in the post-war period, Brazil had very confrontational relations between unions and employers, without cooperation, and with a distribution pattern favouring capital, as real wages trailed productivity.

Canada



The official National Accounts data in Canada begin in 1926; the (construction of the) data from 1926 to 1959 are discussed in S. A. Goldberg (1964), while Robert F. Crozier (no date) discuss the data for the 1926 to 1976 period. There are national accounts data going further back than 1926, especially Urquhart’s (1986) study of GNP in Canada 1870 to 1926, but with one exception they do not provide nation-wide coverage from the income side. Crozier (no date) in a Statistics Canada publication provide national accounts data from the income side for the years 1919 to 1926.
We use income-side national accounts data for 1926 until 1976 from a 1983 Statistics Canada publication (Leacy 1983). It is for the whole economy; the book does not present sector data. The numerator is the post “Wages, salaries, and supplementary labour income.” The supplementary part includes “other expenditures by employers on labour account that can be regarded as payment for employees' services. Included here are employers' contributions to pension funds, employee welfare funds, unemployment insurance, and workmen's compensation.” It is possible to correct with the proportional method for the incomes of self-employed (more precisely, non-incorporated business) as their incomes are separate posts (farm and non-farm). Capital consumption is reported separately, which makes it possible to do gross as well as net estimates of factor shares. We link the proportionally adjusted gross capital shares series calculated from F. H. Leacy (1983) for the years 1926 to 1976 to calculations that we make based on the National Accounts data taken from the Statistics Canada website, the Table 380–0063 “Gross domestic product, income-based.”14 These data cover the years 1961 to 2016. Here we calculate gross capital share as gross operating surplus plus one-third of gross mixed income, divided by factor income including depreciation. The net capital share is net operating surplus plus one-third of net mixed income, divided by factor income without depreciation. The series from Leacy (1983) and the current Statistics Canada series are similar for the overlapping years 1961–1976—the correlation is 0.81 for the gross series and 0.48 for the net series—but the level is slightly lower for the newer series, but about 1–2 percentage points. Therefore, to avoid a break in the series between 1976 and 1977, we calculate capital shares for 1977–2015 by extrapolation from the 1976 levels in Leacy (1983), using the growth rates in the capital share series that we have calculated using Statistics Canada’s current series.
As mentioned, while the official national accounts begin in 1926, there are studies for the earlier period as well. Morris Altman (1988) presents new estimates for value added and labour compensation in Quebec and Ontario from 1870 to 1910. Gordon W. Bertram and Michael B. Percy (1979) had nation-wide real wages from 1900 to 1926. M. C. Urquhuart (1986) as mentioned presents extensive new GNP data for 1870–1926, but is concerned with GNP growth and its drivers (especially the issue of whether economic growth was led by exports of wheat and forestry products or if Canada had a dynamic manufacturing sector in the late nineteenth century). Therefore, he does not discuss distribution or national accounts from the income side. Crozier (no date, series F166–F178) presents labour income sums per sector for the years 1919 to 1926, but unfortunately does not present the full national income accounts, with corresponding capital incomes and so on.
There is some research on the movements and determinants of factor shares in Canada. John H. Hotson (1963) provided an analysis, typical of the 1960s, of the alleged “constancy of the wage share”; he uses Canadian data for 1926 to 1960. Goldberg (1964) provides a careful discussion for the period 1926 to 1958, with an in-depth look at different definitions (with and without factor payments to other countries, before and after tax, and so on). Goldberg finds an increase in the wage share from the second half of the 1920s to the second half of the 1950s, which seems to depend to a large degree on the decrease of number of self-employed and corresponding increase in the number of wage and salary earners—he does not adjust the wage share for the labour incomes of the self-employed (pp. 213–15). When Goldberg looks only at the corporate sector, the increase in the wage share is much smaller, around 1–2 percent (p. 226). Goldberg also examines the different cyclical behaviour of different income type, noting for example that wages and salaries are affected less by the business cycle than profits are (p. 255). Camilo Dagum (1988) discusses factor shares from 1926 to 1984. He finds that the wage share was quite low in the second half of the 1920s (around 55 percent), was high during the Great Depression in the early 1930s as profits bottomed out, then fell back to WWII, and then increased piecemeal from the second half of the 1940s until around 1970, when it peaked out at a high level (around 72 percent). It then slightly fell back until the first half of the 1980s, a period when the share of interest in national income almost doubled (from 6 to 11 percent). Beyond these more secular trends, he finds the expected countercyclical behaviour of the wage share and procyclical behaviour of the capital share. Adolf Buse (1982) studies the cyclical properties of income distribution in Canada from 1947 to 1978 and while factor shares are not his primary focus, he does find that increases in capital shares, which typically occur in business cycle upturns, increase inequality. Peter Harrison (2009) explores why the median wage did not increased in line with productivity in Canada from 1980 to 2005, and in this study also goes into a discussion of the wage share and how it should be measured. Similarly, Tony Fisher and Doug Hostland (2002) discuss why real wages lagged productivity in Canada from 1994 to 2001. In the process, they also look at the wage share’s development since 1926. They find that the wage share was historically low from 1927 to 1941 and historically high from 1966 to 1977. Using unit roots test, they cannot at the 95 percent level of significance reject the null hypothesis of a unit root in the wage share series. From this, Fisher and Hostland (2002, p. 60) conclude that one cannot say that the factor shares always come back to their historical means; the recent decline in the wage share might be long-lasting. Regarding the causes of the fall in the wage share, they find that part of it is quite technical: an increase in the capital consumption allowances (Fisher and Hostland 2002, p. 65). Ellen Russell and Mathieu Dufour (2007) provide another study of the recent decline of the wage share, more explicitly motivated by a concern with inequality. Louis Morel (2006) is a sectoral take on the fall in the wage share since the 1990s.
Emmanuel Saez and Michael R. Vaell (2005) in their top incomes study of Canada point to that the top income shares fluctuate around high levels in the 1920s and 1930s. Around WWII, they drop dramatically. Saez and Vaell (2005, p. 837) explain this is: (1) steeply increased taxes reducing net-of-tax capital incomes like dividends, and (2) pay compression. They chart an evolution of the top income earners post-1945 where this group is to a growing degree composed of top wage earners, rather than capital owners. Their explanation is that post-1945 well-to-do did not construct as large fortunes as their pre-1945 counterparts, because of the stricter tax system.

Denmark



As in many other countries, national accounting began in Denmark in the 1930s. The first Danish efforts, starting in 1935, to estimate national income and gross domestic product were influenced by the more advanced work on these issues in the neighbouring country Sweden. In the early post war years, Danish national accounting became fully integrated with that of the Anglophone world (Aukrust 1994, pp. 16, 29.) Regular production of national accounts began in 1948, due to the need for such information for the purpose of producing national budgets during the Marshall Plan period (Aukrust 1994, p. 32). Historical extensions backwards were made not the least by Kjeld Bjerke and Niels Ussing (1958) in their study of the 1870 to 1950 period. Building on such contributions and their followers, the central bank economist Kim Abildgren (2008, Table A5) presents an estimated wage share series for Denmark in the 1875–2007 period. It is the wage share for the entire economy at factor cost, gross. The wage sum includes “an imputed compensation per self-employed person corresponding to the average wage sum for wage earners,” that is, the labour method of adjustment is used rather than the proportional method (Abildgren 2008, p. 28). The wage sum estimate builds on data from Statistics Denmark and from P. J. Pedersen (1978). A problematic factor is that the wage data used to calculate the wage sums before 1920 are only from the manufacturing sector. Nevertheless, Abildgren’s data are used until 2007 (100 less the wage share = the capital share). To calculate the capital share after 2007, we use the growth rate of the gross capital share calculated from AMECO data (“Gross operating surplus: total economy: - Adjusted for imputed compensation of self-employed,” series code UQGD, divided by “Gross national income at current prices,” series code UVGN) to extrapolate from the 2007 value based on Abildgren data.
To calculate net capital shares, we use the capital depreciation rate from Kaergård (1991, Table 3). Kaergård presents depreciation in 1929 Danish Crowns and we calculate the depreciation rate as related to GDP by using gross factor income from Hansen (1972), also in 1929 Danish Crowns. The Kaergård series covers the years 1876 to 1914 and 1921 to 1970. The series shows low depreciation rates in the 1870s and 1880s, around 5–6 percent. In the 1890s it rises to 8–9 percent, and in the 1920s, 30s and 40s it is typically around 10–11 percent. It increases further to the 1950s and 1960s, around 14–15 percent. We link this to capital depreciation from AMECO. For the overlapping years in the 1960s AMECO presents a rather stable level around 12–13 percent, that is, a bit lower than Kaergård. For the overlapping years 1960–70 we use an average of Kaergård’s (1991) and AMECO’s depreciation rates; then just AMECO. We apply the capital depreciation series to the gross factor income data from Abildgren (which essentially builds on Hansen) to get net GDP and we calculate net factor shares from this. For the years after 2007 we extrapolate using the growth in the net capital share as calculated from AMECO (“Net operating surplus: total economy: - Adjusted for imputed compensation of self-employed,” series code UQND, divided by “National income at current prices,” series code UVNN).
The focus of the study of Abildgren, which we use for data, is on monetary policy and its connection to wage bargaining, rather than on income distribution. Abildgren’s (2008, p. 8) main comment on the wage share for the period from 1875 to 2007 is that “the wage share of factor income has remained roughly unchanged at a level around 60–70 percent, although with some local upward and downward trends.” To this we might say that a 10 percentage point difference in the wage share of GDP is quite large, and that this still is what Abildgren considers a “normal” span of variation.
There are a few medium run studies on factor shares in Denmark. Per Kongshoj Madsen and Carsten Koch (1976) and Pedersen (1978) discuss the development during the interwar period. Bjerke (1966) and Kongshoj Madsen (1975) discuss factor shares in the 1950s and 1960s. Bjerke finds a rather stable wage share in the 1950s but a “quite remarkable” (p. 21) increase in the early 1960s; Kongshoj Madsen shows that the wage share continued to increase later in the decade. His explanation is the strong wage pressure associated with full employment, ensuring that even though productivity growth was stronger than in the preceding decade, real wages increased even more. David Greasley and Jakob Madsen (2006) compare wage growth in Denmark and New Zealand 1875 to 1939 and find that Danish wages increased more. The reason is not only better productivity growth, but also open economy forces and trade union militancy around WWI which “influenced income distribution and especially favoured wages over property income in Denmark” (Greasley and Madsen 2006, p. 116). Extraordinary real wage increases around WWI are discussed in much Danish literature, too, and Poul Milhoj (1954) in his study of wages in Denmark from 1914 to 1950 points out that something similar happened in 1945.

Finland



The first modern national accounts in Finland were created in 1943, for the years 1926–1938. Work on historical national accounts in a more comprehensive way started in 1959, inspired by Kuznets (Hjerppe 2006, p. 4). Work was done by economists in Statistics Finland and the Bank of Finland. They made ambitious plans to create full datasets for the 1900–1960 period, and after a while increased the ambition to cover the period since 1860. Not all of the work was finished, but it laid the ground for comprehensive historical national accounts published in the 1980s (Hjerppe 2006, p. 4).
Today, for calculating historical capital shares in Finland, there are two relevant sets of historical national accounts data. One has been constructed by the economic historian Rita Hjerppe (1989), who presents data from 1865 to 1985. She presents the necessary wage and salary sums (Hjerppe 1989, Appendix Tables 12A and 12B) as well as the gross value added (Hjerppe 1989, Appendix Table 4). Unfortunately for our purposes there are no separate estimates of entrepreneurial incomes. These are instead all included in the wage and salary sum, meaning that it is impossible from these data to estimate adjusted wage and capital shares. Furthermore, Hjerppe does not present estimates of capital consumption, which we would net to calculate the net capital share. The other relevant data set has been created by Pekka Tiainen (1994) in his doctoral dissertation, “Sources of Growth in Finland: Contribution of Labour Force, Capital, and Total Productivity in the Years 1900–1990.” Tiainen’s (Appendix Tables 18, 19, 20, 25, and 27) is a very comprehensive historical national accounts data set; he presents value added, labour costs, imputed labour remuneration for the self-employed, and capital depreciation per sector from 1900 to 1985.
We use Tiainen’s rather than Hjerppe’s because they are more detailed and therefore more flexible when we want to construct our series. We have estimated the capital share for the total economy—with adjustment for labor incomes of the self-employed—for 1900 to 1985, and have linked these estimates to estimates based on AMECO data. With the AMECO database we calculate the gross capital share as adjusted gross capital income (series UQGD) divide by gross factor income, which is the sum of gross capital income and adjusted labour income (series UWCD). The net capital share is adjusted net capital incomes (series UQND) divided by net factor income (UQND+UWCD). The merging has been made simply by taking the Tiainen calculations for 1900–1959, and the AMECO calculations for 1960–2010.
The capital share estimates based on Tiainen’s data and based on AMECO data are quite similar for the overlapping years, 1960–1985. The correlation for the gross series is 0.79 and for the net series 0.75. With both estimates the gross level is around 35 percent in the early 1960s, and then drops about 5 percentage points during the 1960s, with a recovery in 1969–1970. Then there is a further drop in the early 1970s, which is revered in 1978–1979. With both sources, the level in 1985 is a percentage point or two lower than in 1960. The net measure shows a bit more difference, with larger provisions for capital consumptions made by AMECO, meaning that the level is 1–4 percentage points lower for most of the years.
There is little literature on functional income distribution in Finland, but Matti Hannikainen and Sakari Heikkinen (2006, p. 173) use Hjerppe’s data plus modern data from Statistics Finland, and claim that: “The share of wages declined notably in three crisis periods: during WWI (and Civil War) years of the late 1910s, during and after the depression of the 1930s, and during the depression of the 1990s. On the other hand, it rose after WWII, perhaps reflecting the strengthening of trade unions' positions in wage setting.” Antti Ripatti and Juoko Vilmunen (2001) studies the production function of the Finnish economy from 1975 to 2001 and find that an increase in the mark-up is the main explanation of the rising capital share. Furthermore, Arto Luoma and Jani Luoto (2010) analyse the production function of the Finnish economy over the twentieth century. Jukka Jalava, Matthi Pohjola, Antti Pipatti, et al. (2003) use Tiainen’s data to study technological change and capital-labour substitution in Finland from 1902 to 2003.

France

Piketty and Zucman (2013) recently have put tremendous work into reconstructing French national accounts, so we use their data. Their data for France is presented in a spreadsheet available for download from Piketty’s web site (http://piketty.pse.ens.fr/fr/capitalisback). They present detailed national income accounts back to 1890 and we use the data in the table “DataFR1: Raw national accounts series for France 1890–2010.” We calculate the gross capital income sum as the sum of net corporate profits, housing capital income, self-employment capital income, and capital depreciation.15 We then calculate the gross capital share as the gross capital income sum divided by GDP at factor cost. The net capital income sum is the same as the earlier, but without capital depreciation. The net capital share is then calculated as net capital income divided by NDP at factor cost. Since Piketty and Zucman’s data end in 2010, we extrapolate 2011–2015 using the growth rates in capital shares according to AMECO data. From AMECO, we calculate the gross capital share as gross adjusted surplus (UQGD) divided by gross national income (UVGN), and the net capital share as net adjusted surplus (UQND) divided by national income (UVNN).

Germany



For Germany, our main source is Piketty and Zucman’s (2013) Germany database, which compiles data from a host of historical national accounts research. German historical national accounts naturally have some break points, due to the drastic regime shifts that the country experienced. The data we build on can then be divided into one set of sources for the 1891 to 1938 period, and another for the 1950–2011 period.
For the pre-1950 period, Walther G. Hoffmann’s (1965) classic study still is the starting point,16 even though several adjustments have been made.17 Piketty and Zucman (Germany spreadsheet, “DataDE1c: Raw 1850–1950 national accounts series for Germany”) present the national income estimates by Hoffmann, and this slightly adjusted database (Piketty and Zucman 2013, pp. 78–79) is the starting point for our pre-1950 estimates. We use Hoffmann’s capital income estimate, and add imputed labour incomes of the self-employed. These are calculated by taking the share of the self-employed among all employed, which again comes from Hoffmann, times total unadjusted labour income to approximate total income of the self-employed; we then assign one-third of this income sum to the capital income post. We only have the share of self-employed for 1891–1907 and 1925–1938. From 1891 to 1907 the share decreases from 25 to 20 percent. In 1925 it is 19 percent, and stays around this level until the late 1930s when it decreases by a couple of percentage points. Based on the lack of change from 1907 to 1925, we believe it is safe to interpolate a 20 percent level between those years. We also want to adjust for capital depreciation. There are no capital depreciation data for the 1890s but based on Albrecht Ritschl and Mark Spoerer (1997, Table A.1) we estimate that the depreciation rate varies between 2.3 and 7.6 percent of GDP 1901–1913, with an increasing trend. Based on this, we assume that capital depreciation was 3 percent per year in the 1890s. For 1925–1938 we use the estimates by Ritschl (2002), as reported by Piketty and Zucman. In this period, capital depreciation corresponded to between 7.8 and 10.5 percent of GDP. The resulting capital income sum is then divided by factor cost national income adjusted for capital depreciation. To calculate the net capital share, we use the adjusted capital income sum as discussed earlier and divide it by national income.
There are no data for the WWII years or the immediate post-war years. From 1950 to 2011 there are official National Accounts,18 and we use them as reported by Piketty and Zuman (2014) in their Germany spreadsheet, section “DataDE1: Raw national income accounts series for Germany 1970–today, linked with 1950–1970 income accounts from DateDE1b.” We calculate the gross capital share 1950–2011 as the capital income sum (including imputed capital incomes of the self-employed) plus capital depreciation, divided by domestic factor incomes including capital depreciation. The net capital share is calculated as the adjusted capital income sum divided by domestic factor income. To extrapolate to the years 2012–2015, we use AMECO data. With the AMECO data, we calculate the gross capital share as gross adjusted surplus (UQGD) divided by gross national income (UVGN), and the net capital share as net adjusted surplus (UQND) divided by national income (UVNN). The AMECO levels of capital shares are markedly lower than the ones estimated on Piketty-Zucman ones. The difference is small at the beginning of the 1990s, but grows larger in the second half of the 1990s and early 2000s. From 1997 on, the estimates based on Piketty and Zucman are about 4–5 percentage points higher. The difference likely depends on different ways of adjusting for the incomes of the self-employed. Piketty and Zucman show for Germany that the average wage of self-employed workers/average wage of salaried workers decreased steeply in the 1990s, which means that a larger part of self-employed incomes must be allocated to capital income. This means that the capital share increases more estimated on these data than according to AMECO data.19 Because of the different estimation techniques, it becomes difficult to chain these series together. For this reason, we use the growth rate in the AMECO series to extrapolate the Piketty and Zucman series for the years 2012–2015. While the levels of the AMECO and Piketty and Zucman series are different, for the reasons explained earlier, the changes are very similar; the correlation for the overlapping years 1991–2011 are 0.99 for both the gross and the net series. For this reason, it seems unproblematic to extrapolate the Piketty and Zucman series using changes from the AMECO series.
There is some literature on functional income distribution in Germany: Rolf Peffekoven (1965) and Ritschl (2004) discuss determinants of wage shares over the course of the twentieth century, and Nikolaus Dinckelacker and Harold Mattfeldt (no date) analyse profit rates from 1850 to 1913. Jean-Luc Demeulemeester, Claude Diebolt, and Magali Jaoul Grammare

(2011) discuss wage sums from 1810 to 1989.


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